Considering the Role of Experience in the Formation of Behavioral Biases from a Developmental, Cross-Cultural, and Evolutionary Perspective
Humans make countless choices every day that affect their health, safety, and finances. Despite the high stakes, decision-making is often irrational from the viewpoint of traditional economics, i.e., the choices made are contrary to existing preferences. This leads to negative consequences for indiv...
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Animal Behavior and Cognition
2019-08-01
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Online Access: | http://www.animalbehaviorandcognition.org/article.php?id=1177 |
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doaj-310842e990cc410db00b2dd8ae5da46d2020-11-25T00:52:37ZengAnimal Behavior and CognitionAnimal Behavior and Cognition2372-50522372-43232019-08-016317919310.26451/abc.06.03.03.2019Considering the Role of Experience in the Formation of Behavioral Biases from a Developmental, Cross-Cultural, and Evolutionary PerspectiveRebecca Williamson Bethany MacDonald Sarah F. Brosnan Humans make countless choices every day that affect their health, safety, and finances. Despite the high stakes, decision-making is often irrational from the viewpoint of traditional economics, i.e., the choices made are contrary to existing preferences. This leads to negative consequences for individuals and to inefficiencies in the exchange of goods. The fields of behavioral and experimental economics have made great strides in understanding these sub-optimal patterns of behavior, but we still cannot always predict human decisions. In this paper, we present developmental, cross-cultural, and comparative findings for three irrational tendencies (framing effects, the endowment effect, and inequity aversion) to illustrate two different patterns that experience can play in their formation. This analysis allows us to consider why these tendencies have emerged, what benefits they may bring to the decision-maker, and to propose types of interventions that may combat these tendencies. Throughout, we suggest where this approach of combining comparative and developmental work can address theoretical debates and practical questions within the field of behavioral economics.http://www.animalbehaviorandcognition.org/article.php?id=1177Decision makingBehavioral biasesCognitive and perceptual developmentEvolutionary theoryInformationKnowledge and uncertainty |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Rebecca Williamson Bethany MacDonald Sarah F. Brosnan |
spellingShingle |
Rebecca Williamson Bethany MacDonald Sarah F. Brosnan Considering the Role of Experience in the Formation of Behavioral Biases from a Developmental, Cross-Cultural, and Evolutionary Perspective Animal Behavior and Cognition Decision making Behavioral biases Cognitive and perceptual development Evolutionary theory Information Knowledge and uncertainty |
author_facet |
Rebecca Williamson Bethany MacDonald Sarah F. Brosnan |
author_sort |
Rebecca Williamson |
title |
Considering the Role of Experience in the Formation of Behavioral Biases from a Developmental, Cross-Cultural, and Evolutionary Perspective |
title_short |
Considering the Role of Experience in the Formation of Behavioral Biases from a Developmental, Cross-Cultural, and Evolutionary Perspective |
title_full |
Considering the Role of Experience in the Formation of Behavioral Biases from a Developmental, Cross-Cultural, and Evolutionary Perspective |
title_fullStr |
Considering the Role of Experience in the Formation of Behavioral Biases from a Developmental, Cross-Cultural, and Evolutionary Perspective |
title_full_unstemmed |
Considering the Role of Experience in the Formation of Behavioral Biases from a Developmental, Cross-Cultural, and Evolutionary Perspective |
title_sort |
considering the role of experience in the formation of behavioral biases from a developmental, cross-cultural, and evolutionary perspective |
publisher |
Animal Behavior and Cognition |
series |
Animal Behavior and Cognition |
issn |
2372-5052 2372-4323 |
publishDate |
2019-08-01 |
description |
Humans make countless choices every day that affect their health, safety, and finances. Despite the high stakes, decision-making is often irrational from the viewpoint of traditional economics, i.e., the choices made are contrary to existing preferences. This leads to negative consequences for individuals and to inefficiencies in the exchange of goods. The fields of behavioral and experimental economics have made great strides in understanding these sub-optimal patterns of behavior, but we still cannot always predict human decisions. In this paper, we present developmental, cross-cultural, and comparative findings for three irrational tendencies (framing effects, the endowment effect, and inequity aversion) to illustrate two different patterns that experience can play in their formation. This analysis allows us to consider why these tendencies have emerged, what benefits they may bring to the decision-maker, and to propose types of interventions that may combat these tendencies. Throughout, we suggest where this approach of combining comparative and developmental work can address theoretical debates and practical questions within the field of behavioral economics. |
topic |
Decision making Behavioral biases Cognitive and perceptual development Evolutionary theory Information Knowledge and uncertainty |
url |
http://www.animalbehaviorandcognition.org/article.php?id=1177 |
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